WW,
Thanks for bringing these knives/machetes up for discussion. They are not ethnographic, as you say, but I'll leave them here for discussion because I have also heard that these were modeled after Filipino swords.
There is some similarity to the Visayan swords of Panay and of Leyte/Samar. The narrow forte is similar to talibon from the Eastern Visayas, while the blade shapes resemble tenegre from the Western Visayas. Those weapons usually have a chisel grind to the edge, whereas the Collins' examples have a V-grind.
The hilt also has a Filipino look, resembling the kakatua pommel on some Moro weapons.
It's not surprising that a U.S. company copied some of the Filipino blade styles given that the Philippines was a U.S. possession from 1898 until 1946.
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